Corrections: September 13, 2017

Sept. 12, 2017

INTERNATIONAL

The Guardia Sanframondi Journal article on Monday about a parade in which residents of the Italian town re-enact Bible stories described one of the scenes incorrectly. A villager portrayed the biblical patriarch Abraham as he offered his son Isaac in sacrifice; he did not portray Samuel anointing David as king of Israel. The error was repeated in a picture caption.

SPORTS

A picture on Saturday with an article about Major League Baseball’s decision to move the Yankees’ three-game series in St. Petersburg, Fla., against the Tampa Bay Rays to Citi Field was published in error. It showed the Yankees warming up for a 1998 regular-season game at Shea Stadium against the Mets, not the team warming up before a 1998 game that was moved to Shea Stadium because a beam had fallen at Yankee Stadium.

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An article on Friday about the Yankees’ 9-1 victory over the Baltimore Orioles referred incorrectly to the Yankees’ results in the series in Baltimore. It was their first series win — not sweep — in Baltimore since 2013.

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An article on Friday about the women’s semifinals at the United States Open misstated Sloane Stephens’s results at major tournaments since reaching the semifinals of the 2013 Australian Open. She advanced past the fourth round once, at Wimbledon in 2013; it is not the case that “she had not advanced past the fourth round in a major tournament” until this year’s U.S. Open.

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An article on Saturday about the men’s semifinals at the United States Open misidentified the last man representing South Africa to reach a Grand Slam final before Kevin Anderson at this year’s U.S. Open. The last to do so was Kevin Curren, at the 1984 Australian Open — not Johan Kriek, at the 1981 Australian Open.

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An article on Thursday about the men’s quarterfinals at the United States Open misstated the given name of Rafael Nadal’s opponent. He is Andrey Rublev, not Andrew.

THE ARTS

An appraisal on Tuesday about the music of Michael Friedman misstated part of the lyrics of the song “Populism, Yea Yea” from the musical “Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson.” The song is a rallying cry for “people who don’t just think about things” — not for those who “just don’t think.”

WEEKEND

An art review on Friday about an exhibit featuring works by Alfred H. Barr Jr. and Philip Johnson misstated the relationship between Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Lilly Reich. They were professional partners and also had a romantic relationship, but they were not husband and wife.

OBITUARIES

An obituary on Monday about the documentary filmmaker Jeffrey Tuchman misstated the name of the county in England where he attended school. It is Hertfordshire, not Hersfordshire.

EDITORIAL

An editorial on Sunday misstated the background of Representative Jim Bridenstine, President Trump’s choice to run NASA. Mr. Bridenstine is on the House Science, Space and Technology Committee and previously was executive director of the Tulsa Air and Space Museum and Planetarium. It was not correct that he had no science or space background.

Errors are corrected during the press run whenever possible, so some errors noted here may not have appeared in all editions.